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Fatimid invasion of Egypt (914–915)

The first Fatimid invasion of Egypt occurred in 914–915, soon after the establishment of the Fatimid Caliphate in Ifriqiya in 909. The Fatimids launched an expedition east, against the Abbasid Caliphate, under the Berber General Habasa ibn Yusuf. Habasa succeeded in subduing the cities on the Libyan coast between Ifriqiya and Egypt, and captured Alexandria. The Fatimid heir-apparent, al-Qa'im bi-Amr Allah, then arrived to take over the campaign. Attempts to conquer the Egyptian capital, Fustat, were beaten back by the Abbasid troops in the province. A risky affair even at the outset, the arrival of Abbasid reinforcements from Syria and Iraq under Mu'nis al-Muzaffar doomed the invasion to failure, and al-Qa'im and the remnants of his army abandoned Alexandria and returned to Ifriqiya in May 915. The failure did not prevent the Fatimids from launching another unsuccessful attempt to capture Egypt four years later. It was not until 969 that the Fatimids conquered Egypt and made it the centre of their empire.

First Fatimid invasion of Egypt
Part of the Fatimid Caliphate's expansion and their conflict with the Abbasid Caliphate
Date24 January 914 – May 915
Location
Result Stalemate
Belligerents
Fatimid Caliphate Abbasid Caliphate
Commanders and leaders
al-Qa'im bi-Amr Allah
Habasa ibn Yusuf
Takin al-Khazari
Mu'nis al-Muzaffar
Casualties and losses
over 24,000 killed or taken prisoner 50,000

Background edit

The Fatimid dynasty came to power in Ifriqiya in 909, when they overthrew the reigning Aghlabids with the support of the Kutama tribe. In contrast to their predecessors, who were content to remain a regional dynasty on the western fringes of the Abbasid Caliphate, the Fatimids held ecumenical pretensions. As imams of the Isma'ili Shi'a sect, and claiming descent from Fatima, the daughter of Muhammad and wife of Ali, they regarded the Sunni Abbasids as usurpers and were determined to overthrow and replace them. Thus in early 910, the Fatimid leader, Abdallah, declared himself caliph with the regnal name of al-Mahdi Billah (r. 909–934).[1]

In line with this imperial vision, following the establishment of their rule in Ifriqiya, the Fatimids' next objective was Egypt, the gateway to the Levant and Iraq, the old heartlands of the Islamic world and seat of their Abbasid rivals.[2] The direct route from Ifriqiya to Egypt led through modern Libya. Apart from the few cities on the coast—Tripoli in the west and the cities of Cyrenaica in the east—this was a country dominated by Berber tribes. From west to east these were the Nafusa, Hawwara, Mazata and Luwata. These tribes had been Islamicized during the previous centuries, although incompletely; thus the Nafusa were Kharijites, while the Mazata were Muslim in name only. Only in Cyrenaica and to the east did there exist true Arab Bedouin, who had migrated there in the 9th century.[3]

The Fatimids entered the area in 911, when Kutama chieftains raided up to the territories of the Luwata. Around Tripoli, which had submitted to the Fatimids after the fall of the Aghlabids, the Hawwara tribesmen quickly came to resent the overbearing behaviour of the Fatimids' Kutama soldiery, as well as their heavy tax demands. A first uprising and siege of the city in 910–911 was followed by a general revolt in summer 912, which also engulfed the city. The Fatimid governor fled, and all Kutama in the city were slaughtered. The Fatimid heir-apparent, al-Qa'im bi-Amr Allah, led a combined land and naval expedition against the Hawwara. After Tripoli, Libya capitulated in June 913, al-Qa'im left one of the principal Kutama generals, Habasa ibn Yusuf, there, to prepare the further eastward expansion of the Fatimid empire.[4]

Al-Mahdi Billah also entertained hopes of a pincer movement against Egypt from two sides, as the pro-Fatimid propaganda had in the previous years managed to take over most of the Yemen, under the leadership of Ibn Hawshab and Ali ibn al-Fadl al-Jayshani. But in late 911, Ibn al-Fadl denounced al-Mahdi as a fraud, and attacked his former companion Ibn Hawshab, who had remained loyal to the Fatimid ruler. Although both died shortly after, their conflict weakened the Fatimid position in the Yemen, allowing the pro-Abbasid Yu'firids to regain much lost ground, and thwarted any hopes of a simultaneous attack on Egypt from the southeast.[5] Nevertheless, the Fatimids could count on the presence of sympathizers in Egypt: in 904–905, al-Mahdi and his family had remained in hiding with sympathizers under the chief missionary (da'i) Abu Ali Hasan ibn Ahmad, before moving on to the Maghreb.[6]

Invasion of Egypt edit

The 15th-century Isma'ili (and thus pro-Fatimid) historian, Idris Imad al-Din, provides the most detail about the expedition against Egypt, and is complemented by Sunni sources such as al-Tabari and al-Kindi, who write from the opposite side.[7]

Conquest of the Cyrenaica edit

 
 
Tripoli
 
Sirte
 
Ajdabiya
 
Barqa
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Sites of the campaign in Libya

The expedition against Egypt was launched on 24 January 914, when the army under Habasa ibn Yusuf departed Tripoli. The Fatimid army took the coastal route. The Abbasid garrisons of Sirte and Ajdabiya abandoned these towns without battle, and on 6 February Habasa entered Barqa, the capital of Cyrenaica and the "gateway of Egypt".[8][9][10] The conquest of Cyrenaica promised to be beneficial to the Fatimid treasury: the land tax (kharaj) had brought in 24,000 gold dinars to the Abbasids annually, with another 15,000 dinars provided by the jizya paid by the Christian dhimmi, as well as the zakat, and the ushr taxes.[9]

According to Imad al-Din, Barqa was evacuated without battle. Sunni sources claim that the Fatimid troops committed atrocities against the inhabitants and extorted funds from the local merchants.[11] Thus Habasa forced the local pigeon merchants to roast and eat their ware, suspecting them of using their birds to spy for the Abbasids.[9] He urged the members of the local Arab militia (the jund) to enroll in the Fatimid army, while imposing considerable financial levies on the town's population.[12] He furthermore executed two chieftains of the Mazata, who nine years before had waylaid and robbed al-Mahdi during his journey to Ifriqiya; their sons were also killed, while their womenfolk were sold into slavery and their possessions confiscated.[13]

News of the Fatimids' arrival in Barqa provoked the Abbasid authorities in Egypt to send an army against them. Habasa's men, reinforced by fresh troops from Ifriqiya, won the ensuing battle outside the city on 14 March.[13][14]

Capture of Alexandria edit

 
Gold dinar of al-Qa'im bi-Amr Allah, Fatimid caliph in 934–946. As heir-apparent to his father, he led the two early Fatimid invasions of Egypt

Encouraged by this success, al-Mahdi sent his son and heir, al-Qa'im, with another army east to assume command of the expedition.[14] At the head of a force comprising numerous Kutama as well as members of the Arab jund of Ifriqiya, al-Qa'im set out from al-Mahdi's residence at Raqqada on 11 July. He arrived at Tripoli on 1 August, writing to Habasa to await his coming before invading Egypt proper. Disregarding these orders, however, the ambitious Habasa led his forces into Egypt; after defeating an Abbasid force at al-Hanniya (near modern El Alamein), on 27 August 914 he entered Alexandria.[13][14] The Kutama raided south along the River Nile and devastated the country, reaching as far as Giza, across the river from the capital of Egypt, Fustat.[13] Habasa wrote to the local governor, Takin al-Khazari, offering safe-conduct (aman) in exchange for his surrender, but Takin refused.[13] Al-Qa'im arrived in Alexandria on 6 November 914, where he imposed the Fatimid call to prayer, a Kutama governor, and an Isma'ili qadi (judge).[13][14]

In the meantime, the arrival of the Fatimid army in Alexandria provoked panic in Baghdad. The Abbasid government had paid little attention to the affairs of Ifriqiya and the claims of al-Mahdi, but now urgent enquiries were made as to his origin and intentions.[15] Takin urgently requested reinforcements, and the Syrian provinces were mobilized. In September 914, the first Syrian troops began arriving in Fustat.[16] In October, the Abbasid caliph al-Muqtadir appointed his chamberlain Mu'nis as commander-in-chief and ordered him to Egypt.[17] To support the expedition, and alleviate the financial burden on the Egyptian populace of the expeditionary force, two million silver dirham were allocated by the treasury.[18]

March on Fustat and first battle at Giza edit

In early December, as the Nile floods withdrew and allowed the passage of armies along the river, the Fatimid army set out for Fustat in two columns: Habasa ahead, with al-Qa'im following behind.[14][16] As Fustat lay on the eastern bank of the Nile, and the only way to cross to it was by the pontoon bridge to Rawda Island and Giza, Takin al-Khazari mobilized the garrison and the inhabitants of the city and set up a fortified camp at Giza.[14][16]

On 13 December, the first alarm was raised in Fustat, with anyone able to bear arms rushing over the bridge, but no attack ensued. This was repeated the next day, and only on the day after did the Fatimids attack. In the ensuing battle, the Abbasid forces prevailed, as Takin's Turkish horse-archers inflicted heavy casualties on the Kutama lancers. The Egyptian forces pursued the Kutama into the night, but during the pursuit the inexperienced levies fell into an ambush, saving the Fatimid army from a complete rout.[14][16] The Egyptians remained tense, with another false alarm the next day, but only minor skirmishes occurred during the next few days.[16] Despite this setback, some of the Egyptians (Christian Copts and Muslims alike) corresponded with al-Qa'im, revealing the continued presence of an element of possible sympathizers and, according to Heinz Halm, possibly the presence of a Fatimid da'i in Fustat.[14][16]

Fatimid occupation of Fayyum and defeat at Giza edit

 
 
Alexandria
 
Fustat
 
Fayyum Oasis
class=notpageimage|
Sites of the campaign in Lower Egypt

Unable to cross the river to Fustat, al-Qa'im moved, with a large part of his army, around Takin's defences and into the fertile Fayyum Oasis, where they could find provisions. The Kutama initially plundered the area, but al-Qa'im restored order and imposed a regular tax regime on the inhabitants.[14][19]

At this point, al-Qa'im and Habasa, who had remained behind in command of the bulk of the Fatimid army at Giza, fell out when al-Qa'im ordered Habasa replaced. On 8 January 915, in a large-scale battle at Giza, the Fatimids were decisively defeated; Fatimid sources unanimously attribute this defeat to Habasa, who fled the battlefield, despite al-Qa'im's exhortations to stand firm. The pro-Fatimid accounts maintain that al-Qa'im launched three attacks on the enemy and caused many casualties, but these embellishments cannot hide the fact that the battle was a disaster: with his army collapsing, al-Qa'im retreated to Alexandria, which he entered on 23 January.[14][17]

Fatimid withdrawal from Alexandria and revolt in Cyrenaica edit

Despite the setback, in his letters to his father, and the surviving sermons that he delivered in Alexandria, al-Qa'im appears not to have lost confidence in his ultimate success.[20] At Alexandria, he held a number of Friday prayer sermons (khutbah), propagating the Isma'ili and Fatimid cause.[21] For a while he also engaged in negotiations with some Egyptian defectors, who asked for aman from al-Qa'im, and raised the prospect of the capitulation of Fustat.[18] It appears that al-Qa'im himself was not entirely convinced of the sincerity of such proposals, which became impossible when the Abbasid commander-in-chief Mu'nis arrived at Fustat in April 915.[18][22] Mu'nis dismissed Takin and replaced him with Dhuka al-Rumi.[18]

Soon after, Habasa with thirty of his closest followers deserted al-Qa'im and made for Ifriqiya; alarmed by this, al-Qa'im evacuated Alexandria hastily and without battle, leaving much of his armament and equipment behind.[18] Dhuka occupied the city and installed a strong garrison under his son al-Muzzafar, before returning to Fustat to mete out punishment to those elements suspected of corresponding with al-Qa'im.[18] Al-Qa'im arrived at Raqqada on 28 May 915. In his rear, Cyrenaica rose in revolt and overthrew Fatimid control; in Barqa, the entire Kutama garrison was killed.[18] The rebellion was only suppressed in 917, after an 18-month siege of Barqa.[23][24]

Analysis edit

The invasion was costly in blood on both sides: 7,000 Fatimid troops were killed and another 7,000 were taken prisoner in the first round of fighting alone, while in the second round, Habasa's troops are said to have lost 10,000 men killed. Losses among the conscripted Egyptian population range from 10,000 to 20,000 dead, while Imad al-Din put the total number of Egyptians killed as high as 50,000.[25]

Both sides suffered from indiscipline and lack of cohesion in their ranks. Habasa repeatedly acted without consulting al-Qa'im, and committed several atrocities against civilians; his abandonment of the battlefield doomed the expedition, and on his return to Ifriqiya, he was executed.[26] Several Fatimid troops defected, while al-Qa'im too had to struggle to impose discipline on his men, who looted the Fayyum.[26] The Abbasid side also experienced defections, quarrels among their commanders, as well as the willingness of many Egyptians to come to terms with the Fatimid invader, leading to brutal reprisals by the Abbasid authorities against those who corresponded with al-Qa'im.[27]

However, in strategic terms it was the failure of the Fatimids to capture Fustat that determined their failure. Fustat was the main administrative and urban centre of the country, and, as the historian Yaacov Lev points out, the "key to the conquest of Egypt": of the several invasions of Egypt in the 10th century, only these that captured the capital were successful, even if large parts of the country itself were not yet subdued.[28]

The Fatimid expedition was considered risky even at the time. The Fatimids' rule in Ifriqiya was still not secure and was plagued by constant rebellions; the Fatimid navy had been destroyed in 913 during such a revolt by the governor of Sicily.[29] The 10th-century Fatimid propagandist al-Qadi al-Nu'man even reports that al-Qa'im was reluctant to embark on the expedition, and argued with his father in favour of delaying it.[29] According to Michael Brett, the Fatimid invasion failed chiefly "because the expedition found itself deep in the interior of the country, on the desert bank of the Nile across the river from the Egyptian capital, confronted by a garrison which had been able to call upon the forces of the empire at its back".[30] The precariousness of the first Fatimid invasion becomes even clearer when contrasted with the elaborate military preparations and infiltration of the country by Fatimid agents undertaken for several years before its final conquest in 969.[31]

Based on a passage in the history of Ibn Khaldun, the Dutch orientalist Michael Jan de Goeje, who first studied the Qarmatians of Bahrayn, an offshoot branch of the same movement that gave rise to the Fatimids, suggested the existence of a covert alliance between the two, and of a coordinated plan of attack against the Abbasids, with the Qarmatians attacking from their bases close to the Abbasid metropolitan region of Iraq, and the Fatimids from the west. Indeed, the Qarmatians raided the environs of Basra in 913, but their forces were weak, and any notion of a coordinated offensive is belied by the fact that they remained inactive when the actual Fatimid invasion of Egypt took place, as they did during the second Fatimid invasion a few years later. Furthermore, more recent analysis of the origins of the Fatimid–Qarmatian schism has demonstrated the deep-seated doctrinal differences and hostility between the two Isma'ili branches, and the fundamentally anti-Fatimid disposition of the Qarmatians.[32]

Aftermath edit

The expedition's failure rocked the Fatimid regime's very foundation and the belief in the divine mission of the Imam-Caliph was shaken. As a result, discontent arose, particularly among the Kutama sub-tribe of the Malusa, from whom Habasa, now hounded as a criminal, originated.[33] His eventual capture and imprisonment led to the revolt of his brother Ghazwiyya, who had played a crucial role in securing al-Mahdi's regime up to that point, and who had recently been given charge of the entire Kutama country to the west of Ifriqiya. The revolt was quickly crushed, however, and Ghazwiyya and Habasa were executed. When their heads were brought before al-Mahdi, he is said to have exclaimed "Once did these heads enclose the East and West; and now they are contained within this basket!".[24][34]

Despite their failure, the Fatimids launched a second invasion in 919, which was also defeated.[35][36] Apart from a brief intervention in the internal conflicts of the military factions in Egypt in 935, it was not until 969 that another serious invasion was undertaken.[37] By then, the Abbasid Caliphate, weakened by constant power struggles between rival bureaucratic, court, and military factions, and deprived of its outlying provinces to ambitious local dynasts, had ceased to exist as a political entity, with the Abbasid caliphs a powerless pawn of the Buyids;[38] while the Fatimid regime had grown stronger and far more wealthy, and now disposed of a large and disciplined army. This time the Fatimids met little resistance, and Egypt was conquered.[39]

References edit

  1. ^ Kennedy 2004, pp. 313–314.
  2. ^ Lev 1988, p. 192.
  3. ^ Halm 1991, pp. 180–181.
  4. ^ Halm 1991, pp. 161–162, 182.
  5. ^ Halm 1991, pp. 176–180.
  6. ^ Halm 1991, pp. 86–89.
  7. ^ Lev 1988, pp. 186, 187.
  8. ^ Lev 1988, p. 187.
  9. ^ a b c Halm 1991, p. 182.
  10. ^ Madelung 1996, pp. 30, 31.
  11. ^ Lev 1988, pp. 187–188.
  12. ^ Halm 1991, pp. 182–183.
  13. ^ a b c d e f Halm 1991, p. 183.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Lev 1988, p. 188.
  15. ^ Halm 1991, pp. 183–184.
  16. ^ a b c d e f Halm 1991, p. 184.
  17. ^ a b Halm 1991, p. 185.
  18. ^ a b c d e f g Halm 1991, p. 187.
  19. ^ Halm 1991, pp. 184–185.
  20. ^ Halm 1991, pp. 185–186.
  21. ^ Halm 1991, pp. 186–187.
  22. ^ Brett 2001, p. 141.
  23. ^ Madelung 1996, p. 31.
  24. ^ a b Halm 1991, p. 188.
  25. ^ Lev 1988, pp. 188, 189.
  26. ^ a b Lev 1988, p. 189.
  27. ^ Lev 1988, pp. 189–190.
  28. ^ Lev 1979, p. 320.
  29. ^ a b Lev 1988, p. 191.
  30. ^ Brett 2001, p. 146.
  31. ^ Lev 1988, pp. 194–195.
  32. ^ Madelung 1996, pp. 22–23, 29ff..
  33. ^ Halm 1991, pp. 187–188.
  34. ^ Brett 2001, pp. 140–141.
  35. ^ Lev 1988, pp. 190–191.
  36. ^ Madelung 1996, pp. 31–32.
  37. ^ Lev 1988, p. 193.
  38. ^ Kennedy 2004, pp. 185–197.
  39. ^ Lev 1988, pp. 193–196.

Sources edit

  • Brett, Michael (2001). The Rise of the Fatimids: The World of the Mediterranean and the Middle East in the Fourth Century of the Hijra, Tenth Century CE. The Medieval Mediterranean. Vol. 30. Leiden: Brill. ISBN 90-04-11741-5.
  • Halm, Heinz (1991). Das Reich des Mahdi: Der Aufstieg der Fatimiden [The Empire of the Mahdi: The Rise of the Fatimids] (in German). Munich: C. H. Beck. ISBN 978-3-406-35497-7.
  • Kennedy, Hugh (2004). The Prophet and the Age of the Caliphates: The Islamic Near East from the 6th to the 11th Century (Second ed.). Harlow: Longman. ISBN 978-0-582-40525-7.
  • Lev, Yaacov (1979). "The Fāṭimid Conquest of Egypt – Military Political and Social Aspects". Israel Oriental Studies. 9: 315–328. ISSN 0334-4401.
  • Lev, Yaacov (1988). "The Fāṭimids and Egypt 301–358/914–969". Arabica. 35 (2): 186–196. doi:10.1163/157005888X00332.
  • Madelung, Wilferd (1996). "The Fatimids and the Qarmatīs of Bahrayn". In Daftary, Farhad (ed.). Mediaeval Isma'ili History and Thought. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 21–73. ISBN 978-0-521-00310-0.

fatimid, invasion, egypt, first, fatimid, invasion, egypt, occurred, soon, after, establishment, fatimid, caliphate, ifriqiya, fatimids, launched, expedition, east, against, abbasid, caliphate, under, berber, general, habasa, yusuf, habasa, succeeded, subduing. The first Fatimid invasion of Egypt occurred in 914 915 soon after the establishment of the Fatimid Caliphate in Ifriqiya in 909 The Fatimids launched an expedition east against the Abbasid Caliphate under the Berber General Habasa ibn Yusuf Habasa succeeded in subduing the cities on the Libyan coast between Ifriqiya and Egypt and captured Alexandria The Fatimid heir apparent al Qa im bi Amr Allah then arrived to take over the campaign Attempts to conquer the Egyptian capital Fustat were beaten back by the Abbasid troops in the province A risky affair even at the outset the arrival of Abbasid reinforcements from Syria and Iraq under Mu nis al Muzaffar doomed the invasion to failure and al Qa im and the remnants of his army abandoned Alexandria and returned to Ifriqiya in May 915 The failure did not prevent the Fatimids from launching another unsuccessful attempt to capture Egypt four years later It was not until 969 that the Fatimids conquered Egypt and made it the centre of their empire First Fatimid invasion of EgyptPart of the Fatimid Caliphate s expansion and their conflict with the Abbasid CaliphateDate24 January 914 May 915LocationLibya and EgyptResultStalemateBelligerentsFatimid CaliphateAbbasid CaliphateCommanders and leadersal Qa im bi Amr AllahHabasa ibn YusufTakin al KhazariMu nis al MuzaffarCasualties and lossesover 24 000 killed or taken prisoner50 000 Contents 1 Background 2 Invasion of Egypt 2 1 Conquest of the Cyrenaica 2 2 Capture of Alexandria 2 3 March on Fustat and first battle at Giza 2 4 Fatimid occupation of Fayyum and defeat at Giza 2 5 Fatimid withdrawal from Alexandria and revolt in Cyrenaica 3 Analysis 4 Aftermath 5 References 6 SourcesBackground editThe Fatimid dynasty came to power in Ifriqiya in 909 when they overthrew the reigning Aghlabids with the support of the Kutama tribe In contrast to their predecessors who were content to remain a regional dynasty on the western fringes of the Abbasid Caliphate the Fatimids held ecumenical pretensions As imams of the Isma ili Shi a sect and claiming descent from Fatima the daughter of Muhammad and wife of Ali they regarded the Sunni Abbasids as usurpers and were determined to overthrow and replace them Thus in early 910 the Fatimid leader Abdallah declared himself caliph with the regnal name of al Mahdi Billah r 909 934 1 In line with this imperial vision following the establishment of their rule in Ifriqiya the Fatimids next objective was Egypt the gateway to the Levant and Iraq the old heartlands of the Islamic world and seat of their Abbasid rivals 2 The direct route from Ifriqiya to Egypt led through modern Libya Apart from the few cities on the coast Tripoli in the west and the cities of Cyrenaica in the east this was a country dominated by Berber tribes From west to east these were the Nafusa Hawwara Mazata and Luwata These tribes had been Islamicized during the previous centuries although incompletely thus the Nafusa were Kharijites while the Mazata were Muslim in name only Only in Cyrenaica and to the east did there exist true Arab Bedouin who had migrated there in the 9th century 3 The Fatimids entered the area in 911 when Kutama chieftains raided up to the territories of the Luwata Around Tripoli which had submitted to the Fatimids after the fall of the Aghlabids the Hawwara tribesmen quickly came to resent the overbearing behaviour of the Fatimids Kutama soldiery as well as their heavy tax demands A first uprising and siege of the city in 910 911 was followed by a general revolt in summer 912 which also engulfed the city The Fatimid governor fled and all Kutama in the city were slaughtered The Fatimid heir apparent al Qa im bi Amr Allah led a combined land and naval expedition against the Hawwara After Tripoli Libya capitulated in June 913 al Qa im left one of the principal Kutama generals Habasa ibn Yusuf there to prepare the further eastward expansion of the Fatimid empire 4 Al Mahdi Billah also entertained hopes of a pincer movement against Egypt from two sides as the pro Fatimid propaganda had in the previous years managed to take over most of the Yemen under the leadership of Ibn Hawshab and Ali ibn al Fadl al Jayshani But in late 911 Ibn al Fadl denounced al Mahdi as a fraud and attacked his former companion Ibn Hawshab who had remained loyal to the Fatimid ruler Although both died shortly after their conflict weakened the Fatimid position in the Yemen allowing the pro Abbasid Yu firids to regain much lost ground and thwarted any hopes of a simultaneous attack on Egypt from the southeast 5 Nevertheless the Fatimids could count on the presence of sympathizers in Egypt in 904 905 al Mahdi and his family had remained in hiding with sympathizers under the chief missionary da i Abu Ali Hasan ibn Ahmad before moving on to the Maghreb 6 Invasion of Egypt editThe 15th century Isma ili and thus pro Fatimid historian Idris Imad al Din provides the most detail about the expedition against Egypt and is complemented by Sunni sources such as al Tabari and al Kindi who write from the opposite side 7 Conquest of the Cyrenaica edit nbsp nbsp Tripoli nbsp Sirte nbsp Ajdabiya nbsp Barqaclass notpageimage Sites of the campaign in Libya The expedition against Egypt was launched on 24 January 914 when the army under Habasa ibn Yusuf departed Tripoli The Fatimid army took the coastal route The Abbasid garrisons of Sirte and Ajdabiya abandoned these towns without battle and on 6 February Habasa entered Barqa the capital of Cyrenaica and the gateway of Egypt 8 9 10 The conquest of Cyrenaica promised to be beneficial to the Fatimid treasury the land tax kharaj had brought in 24 000 gold dinars to the Abbasids annually with another 15 000 dinars provided by the jizya paid by the Christian dhimmi as well as the zakat and the ushr taxes 9 According to Imad al Din Barqa was evacuated without battle Sunni sources claim that the Fatimid troops committed atrocities against the inhabitants and extorted funds from the local merchants 11 Thus Habasa forced the local pigeon merchants to roast and eat their ware suspecting them of using their birds to spy for the Abbasids 9 He urged the members of the local Arab militia the jund to enroll in the Fatimid army while imposing considerable financial levies on the town s population 12 He furthermore executed two chieftains of the Mazata who nine years before had waylaid and robbed al Mahdi during his journey to Ifriqiya their sons were also killed while their womenfolk were sold into slavery and their possessions confiscated 13 News of the Fatimids arrival in Barqa provoked the Abbasid authorities in Egypt to send an army against them Habasa s men reinforced by fresh troops from Ifriqiya won the ensuing battle outside the city on 14 March 13 14 Capture of Alexandria edit nbsp Gold dinar of al Qa im bi Amr Allah Fatimid caliph in 934 946 As heir apparent to his father he led the two early Fatimid invasions of Egypt Encouraged by this success al Mahdi sent his son and heir al Qa im with another army east to assume command of the expedition 14 At the head of a force comprising numerous Kutama as well as members of the Arab jund of Ifriqiya al Qa im set out from al Mahdi s residence at Raqqada on 11 July He arrived at Tripoli on 1 August writing to Habasa to await his coming before invading Egypt proper Disregarding these orders however the ambitious Habasa led his forces into Egypt after defeating an Abbasid force at al Hanniya near modern El Alamein on 27 August 914 he entered Alexandria 13 14 The Kutama raided south along the River Nile and devastated the country reaching as far as Giza across the river from the capital of Egypt Fustat 13 Habasa wrote to the local governor Takin al Khazari offering safe conduct aman in exchange for his surrender but Takin refused 13 Al Qa im arrived in Alexandria on 6 November 914 where he imposed the Fatimid call to prayer a Kutama governor and an Isma ili qadi judge 13 14 In the meantime the arrival of the Fatimid army in Alexandria provoked panic in Baghdad The Abbasid government had paid little attention to the affairs of Ifriqiya and the claims of al Mahdi but now urgent enquiries were made as to his origin and intentions 15 Takin urgently requested reinforcements and the Syrian provinces were mobilized In September 914 the first Syrian troops began arriving in Fustat 16 In October the Abbasid caliph al Muqtadir appointed his chamberlain Mu nis as commander in chief and ordered him to Egypt 17 To support the expedition and alleviate the financial burden on the Egyptian populace of the expeditionary force two million silver dirham were allocated by the treasury 18 March on Fustat and first battle at Giza edit In early December as the Nile floods withdrew and allowed the passage of armies along the river the Fatimid army set out for Fustat in two columns Habasa ahead with al Qa im following behind 14 16 As Fustat lay on the eastern bank of the Nile and the only way to cross to it was by the pontoon bridge to Rawda Island and Giza Takin al Khazari mobilized the garrison and the inhabitants of the city and set up a fortified camp at Giza 14 16 On 13 December the first alarm was raised in Fustat with anyone able to bear arms rushing over the bridge but no attack ensued This was repeated the next day and only on the day after did the Fatimids attack In the ensuing battle the Abbasid forces prevailed as Takin s Turkish horse archers inflicted heavy casualties on the Kutama lancers The Egyptian forces pursued the Kutama into the night but during the pursuit the inexperienced levies fell into an ambush saving the Fatimid army from a complete rout 14 16 The Egyptians remained tense with another false alarm the next day but only minor skirmishes occurred during the next few days 16 Despite this setback some of the Egyptians Christian Copts and Muslims alike corresponded with al Qa im revealing the continued presence of an element of possible sympathizers and according to Heinz Halm possibly the presence of a Fatimid da i in Fustat 14 16 Fatimid occupation of Fayyum and defeat at Giza edit nbsp nbsp Alexandria nbsp Fustat nbsp Fayyum Oasisclass notpageimage Sites of the campaign in Lower Egypt Unable to cross the river to Fustat al Qa im moved with a large part of his army around Takin s defences and into the fertile Fayyum Oasis where they could find provisions The Kutama initially plundered the area but al Qa im restored order and imposed a regular tax regime on the inhabitants 14 19 At this point al Qa im and Habasa who had remained behind in command of the bulk of the Fatimid army at Giza fell out when al Qa im ordered Habasa replaced On 8 January 915 in a large scale battle at Giza the Fatimids were decisively defeated Fatimid sources unanimously attribute this defeat to Habasa who fled the battlefield despite al Qa im s exhortations to stand firm The pro Fatimid accounts maintain that al Qa im launched three attacks on the enemy and caused many casualties but these embellishments cannot hide the fact that the battle was a disaster with his army collapsing al Qa im retreated to Alexandria which he entered on 23 January 14 17 Fatimid withdrawal from Alexandria and revolt in Cyrenaica edit Despite the setback in his letters to his father and the surviving sermons that he delivered in Alexandria al Qa im appears not to have lost confidence in his ultimate success 20 At Alexandria he held a number of Friday prayer sermons khutbah propagating the Isma ili and Fatimid cause 21 For a while he also engaged in negotiations with some Egyptian defectors who asked for aman from al Qa im and raised the prospect of the capitulation of Fustat 18 It appears that al Qa im himself was not entirely convinced of the sincerity of such proposals which became impossible when the Abbasid commander in chief Mu nis arrived at Fustat in April 915 18 22 Mu nis dismissed Takin and replaced him with Dhuka al Rumi 18 Soon after Habasa with thirty of his closest followers deserted al Qa im and made for Ifriqiya alarmed by this al Qa im evacuated Alexandria hastily and without battle leaving much of his armament and equipment behind 18 Dhuka occupied the city and installed a strong garrison under his son al Muzzafar before returning to Fustat to mete out punishment to those elements suspected of corresponding with al Qa im 18 Al Qa im arrived at Raqqada on 28 May 915 In his rear Cyrenaica rose in revolt and overthrew Fatimid control in Barqa the entire Kutama garrison was killed 18 The rebellion was only suppressed in 917 after an 18 month siege of Barqa 23 24 Analysis editThe invasion was costly in blood on both sides 7 000 Fatimid troops were killed and another 7 000 were taken prisoner in the first round of fighting alone while in the second round Habasa s troops are said to have lost 10 000 men killed Losses among the conscripted Egyptian population range from 10 000 to 20 000 dead while Imad al Din put the total number of Egyptians killed as high as 50 000 25 Both sides suffered from indiscipline and lack of cohesion in their ranks Habasa repeatedly acted without consulting al Qa im and committed several atrocities against civilians his abandonment of the battlefield doomed the expedition and on his return to Ifriqiya he was executed 26 Several Fatimid troops defected while al Qa im too had to struggle to impose discipline on his men who looted the Fayyum 26 The Abbasid side also experienced defections quarrels among their commanders as well as the willingness of many Egyptians to come to terms with the Fatimid invader leading to brutal reprisals by the Abbasid authorities against those who corresponded with al Qa im 27 However in strategic terms it was the failure of the Fatimids to capture Fustat that determined their failure Fustat was the main administrative and urban centre of the country and as the historian Yaacov Lev points out the key to the conquest of Egypt of the several invasions of Egypt in the 10th century only these that captured the capital were successful even if large parts of the country itself were not yet subdued 28 The Fatimid expedition was considered risky even at the time The Fatimids rule in Ifriqiya was still not secure and was plagued by constant rebellions the Fatimid navy had been destroyed in 913 during such a revolt by the governor of Sicily 29 The 10th century Fatimid propagandist al Qadi al Nu man even reports that al Qa im was reluctant to embark on the expedition and argued with his father in favour of delaying it 29 According to Michael Brett the Fatimid invasion failed chiefly because the expedition found itself deep in the interior of the country on the desert bank of the Nile across the river from the Egyptian capital confronted by a garrison which had been able to call upon the forces of the empire at its back 30 The precariousness of the first Fatimid invasion becomes even clearer when contrasted with the elaborate military preparations and infiltration of the country by Fatimid agents undertaken for several years before its final conquest in 969 31 Based on a passage in the history of Ibn Khaldun the Dutch orientalist Michael Jan de Goeje who first studied the Qarmatians of Bahrayn an offshoot branch of the same movement that gave rise to the Fatimids suggested the existence of a covert alliance between the two and of a coordinated plan of attack against the Abbasids with the Qarmatians attacking from their bases close to the Abbasid metropolitan region of Iraq and the Fatimids from the west Indeed the Qarmatians raided the environs of Basra in 913 but their forces were weak and any notion of a coordinated offensive is belied by the fact that they remained inactive when the actual Fatimid invasion of Egypt took place as they did during the second Fatimid invasion a few years later Furthermore more recent analysis of the origins of the Fatimid Qarmatian schism has demonstrated the deep seated doctrinal differences and hostility between the two Isma ili branches and the fundamentally anti Fatimid disposition of the Qarmatians 32 Aftermath editThe expedition s failure rocked the Fatimid regime s very foundation and the belief in the divine mission of the Imam Caliph was shaken As a result discontent arose particularly among the Kutama sub tribe of the Malusa from whom Habasa now hounded as a criminal originated 33 His eventual capture and imprisonment led to the revolt of his brother Ghazwiyya who had played a crucial role in securing al Mahdi s regime up to that point and who had recently been given charge of the entire Kutama country to the west of Ifriqiya The revolt was quickly crushed however and Ghazwiyya and Habasa were executed When their heads were brought before al Mahdi he is said to have exclaimed Once did these heads enclose the East and West and now they are contained within this basket 24 34 Despite their failure the Fatimids launched a second invasion in 919 which was also defeated 35 36 Apart from a brief intervention in the internal conflicts of the military factions in Egypt in 935 it was not until 969 that another serious invasion was undertaken 37 By then the Abbasid Caliphate weakened by constant power struggles between rival bureaucratic court and military factions and deprived of its outlying provinces to ambitious local dynasts had ceased to exist as a political entity with the Abbasid caliphs a powerless pawn of the Buyids 38 while the Fatimid regime had grown stronger and far more wealthy and now disposed of a large and disciplined army This time the Fatimids met little resistance and Egypt was conquered 39 References edit Kennedy 2004 pp 313 314 Lev 1988 p 192 Halm 1991 pp 180 181 Halm 1991 pp 161 162 182 Halm 1991 pp 176 180 Halm 1991 pp 86 89 Lev 1988 pp 186 187 Lev 1988 p 187 a b c Halm 1991 p 182 Madelung 1996 pp 30 31 Lev 1988 pp 187 188 Halm 1991 pp 182 183 a b c d e f Halm 1991 p 183 a b c d e f g h i j Lev 1988 p 188 Halm 1991 pp 183 184 a b c d e f Halm 1991 p 184 a b Halm 1991 p 185 a b c d e f g Halm 1991 p 187 Halm 1991 pp 184 185 Halm 1991 pp 185 186 Halm 1991 pp 186 187 Brett 2001 p 141 Madelung 1996 p 31 a b Halm 1991 p 188 Lev 1988 pp 188 189 a b Lev 1988 p 189 Lev 1988 pp 189 190 Lev 1979 p 320 a b Lev 1988 p 191 Brett 2001 p 146 Lev 1988 pp 194 195 Madelung 1996 pp 22 23 29ff Halm 1991 pp 187 188 Brett 2001 pp 140 141 Lev 1988 pp 190 191 Madelung 1996 pp 31 32 Lev 1988 p 193 Kennedy 2004 pp 185 197 Lev 1988 pp 193 196 Sources editBrett Michael 2001 The Rise of the Fatimids The World of the Mediterranean and the Middle East in the Fourth Century of the Hijra Tenth Century CE The Medieval Mediterranean Vol 30 Leiden Brill ISBN 90 04 11741 5 Halm Heinz 1991 Das Reich des Mahdi Der Aufstieg der Fatimiden The Empire of the Mahdi The Rise of the Fatimids in German Munich C H Beck ISBN 978 3 406 35497 7 Kennedy Hugh 2004 The Prophet and the Age of the Caliphates The Islamic Near East from the 6th to the 11th Century Second ed Harlow Longman ISBN 978 0 582 40525 7 Lev Yaacov 1979 The Faṭimid Conquest of Egypt Military Political and Social Aspects Israel Oriental Studies 9 315 328 ISSN 0334 4401 Lev Yaacov 1988 The Faṭimids and Egypt 301 358 914 969 Arabica 35 2 186 196 doi 10 1163 157005888X00332 Madelung Wilferd 1996 The Fatimids and the Qarmatis of Bahrayn In Daftary Farhad ed Mediaeval Isma ili History and Thought Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 21 73 ISBN 978 0 521 00310 0 Portals nbsp Fatimid Caliphate nbsp Egypt Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fatimid invasion of Egypt 914 915 amp oldid 1205370111, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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